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| Infant Communication | By:Martha
Arterberry and Bill Wilson Gettysburg College Gettysburg, PA arterber@gettysburg.edu |
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| Introduction Design Analysis References |
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Introduction |
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Historically,
young babies have been described by professionals as relatively inactive.
Within the first few months of life, all they appear to do is
sleep, eat, and cry. While
infants do spend a vast majority of their time engaged in these
activities, their vocalizations are an important form of communication.
Infants' cries vary, and this variation can serve as an important communicative
device, signally various states such as hunger, pleasure, or pain (Barr,
Desilets, & Rotman, 1991; Wasz-Hockert et al, 1968). « Return to Top» |
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Design |
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The
independent variables are participant experience (parent, not parent) and cry
type (birth, pain, pleasure, hunger). There
are 4 examples of each type of cry, resulting in a total of 16 trials. Each cry sample is presented twice before participants are
asked to make their judgment. The
dependent variables are number of correct judgments and confidence. |
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Analysis |
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The
data will be presented as the number of correct responses for each cry
type and mean confidence of judgment for each type of cry. A 2 x 4 ANOVA with participant experience (parent, not parent)
as a between subjects factor and cry type (birth, hunger, pleasure, pain)
as a within subjects factor can be conducted on each dependent measure.
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References |
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Barr, R.,
Desilets, J., & Rotman, R. (1991).
The normal crying curve: Hoops
and hurdles. In B. Lester
(Ed.), Handbook of developmental psychopathology (pp. 65-76). New York: Plenum
Press. Wiesenfeld, A.
Malatesta, C. & DeLoach, L. (1981).
Differential parental response to familiar and unfamiliar infant distress
signals. Infant Behavior and Development, 4, 281-295. Wasz-Hockert, O., Lind, J., Vuorenkoski, V., Partanen,
T., & Valanne, E. (1968). The
infant cry: A spectrographic
and auditory analysis. Clinics in Developmental Medicine, 29.
London, England: Heinemann. |
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Last revised:November 01, 2003 07:01:31 PM |
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